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no 20 the carolina watchman established in the yk\i 1832 pril : . h.50 i v.\n e m^^m mmmmihb "~ trustee's sale of real estate by firtue of a mortgage or heed in trust executed by john c connor and s j connor to luke blackraer dated the 8th dar of april 1874 and registered in tlie office oi register of deeds of rowan coun tv in book no 48 page 170 c and upon which default has been made i will expose to ale at public auction at the courthouse dooi ' r slli on the 6th day oi ): 1882 at 11 i 'â– â– â– . ' ' tate to wit a 1 one-fifth ol of aleck mill r subject to the life esl also one-sixth p owned by jÂ«hn lli the lands'of peter vv hairston j im â€¢ 13 'â– rai inci i ' terms cash dati day of ft-bi iry i7:4t li b ' j-e fl 30 iebaker wagons r k crawford & c(x piember the dead ss mottttm great reduction in th of marble monuments and sravs-stc every description i cordially iuvite the public generally u an inspect ion of in : â– : i feel justified in asserting thai in tasi x|i.:i ience under first-chi ' en in all the newest and modern styles aii that the v orkmanship is < ;â– â€¢ oi thr besl in i lie couni ry i (!â€¢â– â– m that ni work is superior to all othi i ' nm reasonable will not exnggerale der to accomplish a sale ai endeavoris to please and gi each customi i the val ue of every dollar they leave with me prices 35 to 50 per cent cheaper than ever offered in this town before call at once or send for price list and de signs satisfaction guarant'd or no charge the erection of marble is the last work of respect which we pay to the memory of departed friends johns hutcbinsok salisbirt . \. c o i i i rlanvm ijlclullillul a.ttoi lors sa tasbu1 â– lai ay22 i 79â€”tt see mill 1 . want â– riplii "â€¢ ' - j â– â– : â– i ;â– : lv â– â– - . â– . a m i . : â– â– 1 he southern * fc !>-> ti i â– is ' as described by a northern visitorâ€”lead ers of society and the best people of the s the following is an extract from an article in tlie atlantic monthly written by an independent and thoughtful gen tleman whose letters to the new york tribune last year attracted so much at tention : as used in the north this word bour bon designates a class of white men composed chiefly of the leading citizens of the southern states tiic bourbons aie the principal business men lawyers teachers clergymen mer i farmers of i he south 1 hey are i veiywlu re the leaders of society in the best sense ol the word the sus tain tin churchi n ud give such efficiency to ; iiv uioi al activities and discipline of the local communities as the have thus i akeii broadly or general ly the i lass includes the best people of ith or most oi them they are . .-. bou 3 >' cai â– â– â€¢ in polil ice they are demo â– m opposition to the i q .â– .-.. â– â– !â– ' the re . inii uistered uitii â– â€¢ : â– â– â– .::â– . i he time . states â€¢ . i ; ' iguil - iy by â– ii â€¢ who is mvcii â– . : iii iprovi - i â€¢ â– . idi : ich society â– . - Â» â– iual'.y t\d : . ' :. ;â– ; 1 . ... ! i to iv â– . ; . â– .. ti â– â– . icy in people i>i ii tbe besl i eoplt .:. our not ; i commuuil ies i is w rong to : no faslehood si ice to the vir . good qnnl b are else !:\ goo ! men they are :. . i ruthful < ons ieatious :â€¢ ind ted and i eligions resembling â– \ ii e foremost men iu our .,!<! towns in all the important d personal character differing al iu being eommuuicative i and having lees reserve than usual among mders as io their political act ion it seems to me to have been for iy i ;:â€¢â– > itable the ueces : ; id and resnll oi i ho peculiar coikditii is ci life and society iuth south the civil war li does not appear i to have been owing to sheer depravity on ; tin ir part nor tt any choice or agency of i tin irs thai there was for some years a disl orbed and unset led state of things in a states colli sious between reni classes followed unavoidably upon the elevation oi the emancipated slaves into political superiority over the uchised white citizens of tho coun try i here has ncyer been any such com pleteness of organization a nong the peo ple ol the south since the war as many persons believe tv have existed there that part of our country is distinguished by much greater feebleness of community and a less organic life than belongs to northern society and the bourbons are not really responsible for everything that has been done south of mason and dix on's line 1 shall have more to say here after of southern politics here 1 wish to i lace the bo-called bourbon type â€¢ ly as possil .â– h fore my readers thus dei ed are as ;â– . class social â– â€¢â€¢ spi able honest and en if we leir politics j ou oi iew they have iu large meas buili up aiul maintained such moral ial and religions organiza i ctivit . south now pos ' aud much of v hat is best and ng iu i '';â€¢â– â€¢â– â– â– -, n state of li the pi wthei i 1 mates is .â– i for jtacii cal reooiistructiou iu â€¢ v3e of extreme ulty ;;:..: i y v hen their re ; â– â– ;'â€¢:; â€¢â– â– â– wen mosl discouragingly slender - . â– . â– â– â– ecedeu to guide â– â– â– furnished by . i'i â€¢ . kind iu 1 be long â– * - i a nd barbar â– h ivc made w â– â– things e tl â– . â– .. . â– iu that we â– uyliod â– â€¢â– w â– â– . i â€¢ i tlou \Â» i-v â– â€¢'â– â– ' t s ficnth men ' i r . : â– l'li i ed an conviction that il nth i ro snf d i;o â– >â– ..-. cd v itjioul the eerioii r.jin h i iuter . lia south â– â– : eiuocrai should make the t ei t free to all who ti . â– â– legally eutitkd to its po - ion and i lieu en dure liatlvcj i : i mighi esnli they plied thai i tin banco violence and fraud were each year diminishing aud thai ucgro political supremacy would i be utterly ruinous foi the state and for !<; insisted that li the republi â€¢ caii i ; in the south possessed the i character and employed the methods of : the same party in the north they would gladly co-operate with it that they were ready to discard and abandon their pres ent political organization whenever any j other party would take np the real prob lems of the south and seriously address itself to their solution iu studying the bourbons i have been forced to conclude that nothing has yet been attained anywhere much better than i the domestic life of this class of the southern people iu its intelligence re finement beauty and general elevation and wholesoinness m m Â» i a massachusetts town destroyed i 2,000,000 of property lost and it is feared many lin i boston feb 18 a fire started in the business portion of the town of haver , hill mass last night ami spread with ' great rapidity the small fire depart ', meut being unable to cope with the ; flames which soon got beyond control ! assistance was telegraphed for to law 1 rence newburyport and other towns ' adjacent the first direct report from haverhill says the first naiioual ! bank the five cent savings bank and ; all of the lower part of washington stre i . have lieni burned aud there is uo ku â– â– â€¢ - ing where the tire will stop tlie peri ; tor at the depol sa â€¢ lie tire is 1 1 uncomfoi tabl . clos and he is afi i will be fo â– .â– â– : i f deserl ; . â– the fires he says co , ei ill leas i teu i pretty buill upon i he su itli ; block finnej block tiltou block i'res coti building bishop building 1 nion block i oilin building on washington street the lmling building ou winga â– â– street have gone the loss will bo ev . ral millions engine i i â– co oing from xewbnryport aud dover a number oi families on wiugate street hu be .: burned out this id the biggp â– fire ; t at has ever occurred i â– this vicinity the streets are lin<d with merchandise and furniture and there ;.. no dou that a number of people ai â– rendered homeless owing to the panicky feeling uo really authentic reports can be got from any person in haverhill j he main telegraph ollice has been burned the connection between the centre of the city and the depot telegraph office being thus seven d at 3:35 a m the fire was got under control hut one block remains ou win gate street but two at tlie upper end of washington street ail else in the square bounded by the merrimac river on south washington square essex street on the east tue north side of wingate street on the north and railroad square on the west is burned to the ground this terri tory embraces the largest part of the boot and shoe manufactories the loss cannot be estimated at present what yester day was the finest street iu the city and the principal business mart is to-day a smouldering shapeless mass of ruins some eighty shoe linns are entirely burned oiil and others suffer more or less damage men who were last night worth thousands are this morning penniless i while the losses of others are fully or partially covered by insurance two thousand people are out of employment ami several families homeless the los is estimated af two million dollars the mosi dreadful feature of the ca lamity is tlie loss of life and the awful uncertainty caused to many anxious hearts it is feared tkat the bodies of a score or more of prominent business men are buried iu the ruins thus fai th ree are known to be dead of the buildings burned most of them are brick blocks about sixty were oectÂ»pied by eighty-six firms about 2,500 people are thrown out of employment the contest for collector thelatest advices inform ubthatthe con test over tlie collectorship ot tbis^lislrici for which mr cooper has been nomina i ted by the president will be carried into the senate where cooper's confirmation ' will be strenuously opposed by senator vance backed by the solid strength of tin democrats it is thought that a sufficient number of republican votes can be secured to prevent the coufiruia ; tiou i the north : ; a!e stalwart of thi - week iu a lengthj editorial pi t .-â– againsf the nomination ol cooper a i disai tr >:. blow al the party in this 1 j state which will resull in i le for nation oi at i-d pai ty in the eveul is con g i mal ion i'iie n'ori u state is the oi .- â– â– the anti-moil c oper eombii ai i m w hich â€¢â– : ..; inning to run â– i s pai iy ui their own social iutcn â– â– '. and â€¢!Â»' va s and moans lltaf will noi bear the lights to be tui ne i on ii lias bee . a hotly waged cou-t t and v!;<::i geis i into tlie senate with v nee turned loose we may expect some rich and interesting i developments charlotte '- ; cr er it i worth remembering that nobody en . joys the nice t surroundings ifin i ad !:â€¢â– â– .;: , i there are mscrabie people about to-dav with one foot in the grave w lien i bottle oi ' : parker's ginger tonic would do them | good than all the doctors und medicine they have ever trii i see adv ocl3-nevl3 the taeiff speech op hon zebulou 15 yance in the united state senate february 14 18*2 continued why mr president is not every roan who works l>y the sweat of his brow a laborer have not these men who are excluded from the category of america given us all our wealth and all our pros perity felled ourforests aud buikled our railroads and dug our canals and made the land to blossom as the roue the senator from maine the other day astonished me not so much by what he said and what he saw but by what he did uot see and did not speak and he did not have the excuse for not seeing | the:<o facts that captain cuttle rendered to mr toots when mr toots came and ; asked him if he coald see sol gills no i sir said captain cuttle 3-011 cannot i sec sol gills why or wherefore t i dekase he is inwisible laughter i these facts were uot invisible to the sen ' ator he said ii is our duty to protect ! american labor and showed the differ ence between the labor of america and i the labor of europe the european la borers are politically inferior beings not invested with any of the privileges and ' franchises of the country i:i which they i live bul here according to the constitu tion said the senator the laborers arc the governors they an the government j so ;. a . mr president ! agree with him ; but if he can show me under the cou iou that the :.!â– â– â€¢ v who stand t at â– ..â– "â– â€¢ â– .'..'. id . - : â– â– â€¢ more . â– . ., . . will n ivi u-p tl â€¢. . " 1 .'â€¢" â– 1 hi assert â– â– .:. ; . - . :â€¢â– : â€¢ â– ; iÂ»e â€¢ pinner or - â– â– ;.-.. that will en.ibk !.:. . j dtil ies as a citiz 1 i this gi â– â– i oi all . â€¢ â– â– . . â– â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â– han ; i .â– .. intelli â– .. . â– ;â– i â– . ' â– : - . it it and i v 1 u 1 â– . . ' : â– â– evv â– 1 lie sa â– â– . l>ui if : â– . ' .:â€¢ i â– ; !'. nasi â€¢â– ho hoes i'ott'.i in . outli should i â– . :. . .... . . hoe-li . , : . on his j ick-knife and i frsi . . isjion hih flannel shirt an ! id m 1 ! .: nun - i i verythiug else i hat he ; uses in wdei m i i â– v ages of his !â€¢â– â– <.: ii ; . . in > ew e â– â€¢.,'â– md should be such as s-hall enable him to do all this 11 taku ui : ; â€¢â€¢; ill ire fi o;u this .,,. â– . 1 â€¢ iiold i.i peace v : !'-:; k can - â– m tin lav or ( - ! ; i i t y j or j .â€¢:â– ! k'j for 111 ikiag on â– labi rer feed an j other and edu ate him and his children 1 then is th â– contvovei .-\ closed american labor ! certainly sir i am with you :'â€¢â€¢>! american labor let us pro tecl american labor and put the laborer ! as high in the scale of intelligence as pos sible but do no require the poor negro making cotton in the south at 8 10 a month to pay al 1 nsl one half of that ten to the now euglaud man thai he may have car pete n the door and a piano in the par lor that his children may go to school and all may learn i read and write that is not the kind of protection i want thai brings the whole subject to the oiiiliii i iudicated in my 0{>eniug re luai .-. flint is class legislation ; tliat is unjust legislation ; thai is unequal legis lation : thai if iinconstitutioual iegiala liou thai :- dishoue legislation and . here i of it i want all anier , . labor to have a fair and even chance i waul my own poor workingmen at home protectedÂ«iiot only against foreign pau pers but isu against brigandage al most ever item t>f foreign raw material 1 y our factoi ies is the product of foreign pan per hibor : and is admitted duty free j'.y the report of the chief of the bureau of statistics for the three months ending september 30 is30 there is sei ii a statement of the imports of iron ore which shows a total of 42 000 tons worth 1,102,000 brought from every quarter of the world all dug by pauper labor and much of it even by con vict labor as 1 am informed natably j !â€¢'{, 000 tons from the french possessions in africa this in preference to the ore dug by free american labor in alabama,ten nessee georgia north carolina and oth er states it comes in as ballast in for eign bottoms to the detriment of ameri can ship-owners in fact joe smith's book of mormon imports absolutely veri ty by the side of this cry of tho protected capitalists of the north for the protec tion of american agaiust pauper labor tho foreign pauper is iu fact the spe cial favorite of the manufacturers who discriminate in hin behalf whenever they can possibly make anything by it in the first place they invite him here and give him a homestead on ihe public do main if he will settle upon it while they denj this to eleven millions of their own countrymen who cauuot take die iron-clad oath citizi â– â– â– â€¢ of the states thro whose iu btrumeutality chiefly that domain was ac quired in the next j'hu we see by the reports of the consuls that there is a con siderable and constantly increasing trade i with nearly all |!| <- countries of the world j iu american manufactures ; the meaning of which is that they are relling their goods to foreign paiipers v in competition with british 1 iiifactures al about one halfthe price they sell the same goods to th ir own <â€¢â€¢ tisl >. > men at home ameri can labor is taxed that foreign paupers i â€¢ . nvt our goods cheap the m^i [ d mt and i he tii sl ~ â€¢ -" ... â– â€¢ â– â– â– ; '-''^ 1 ;â€¢. :. ,. -\ .-: us the eann bal : ...:.; : .. smith's missionary , .. cks him in the hea i nit a hatchet : .,â– - 1 icrli he paid aol hing i>iil ;'.<<-â– cosl of j pvoducti u ' uts him up with i knife !<;;â– s ; icii oar â€¢â€¢ â– â– â€¢ , would have ; â€¢â– â€¢". â– 'â– > i ei â€¢ enl uiil s.il - him if he us .- th liii ' â€¢ salt foi â€¢ . â– . â€¢ . i!m 50 .!.Â«.:.. : i d sai â€¢ â€¢â€¢â– i ., .- ., 1 i . his medi h we 1 â€¢ â– â€¢â€¢'.â€¢ oi from : â– . ' ,, :> . ;â– .-; .â€¢<â– :! .^ :â– â€¢ â– ; .<- inhabitants ssiuwieh 1 : i we have ;â€¢ tit-a-y ; i ;, â€¢ â– iido vith them ; and ! tkose tie â€¢ i ' ;' : p ople ai e fui ni ! ii t i half price with al they need of goods manufacture of which is paid for by the taxation oi the american people i they are all paupers according the pro j ttferionist idea bul little removed from ] barbarism an i yel for the sake of helping i our manufactures to s market we let in : their sugar frei . to break down tiie ngar iuterests of louisiana which is the pro duct f ann rican la or n the face of i these facts the cr ol protection to amer â– â– â– :â– .. laftor becomes the merest sham the veriest cant that ever was employed as the slogan even of a party fac tion for the deception of mankind â€” the men who employ it take advantage of the laws of political economy by pur chasing everything they use even to ; their labor in the unrestricted markets of i the world and violate those laws openly by forcing their owu countrymen to buy from them only and shotting off by an act of congress all possible competition already thej use cheap canadian labor and to-morrow they would till their fac tories with coolies and pig tail chinese to the exclusion of american labor if they | were not fearful their establishments j would be burned over their heads away with this miserable pretext as to the iext claim for protection that it builds up a home market keeps ! our money from going abroad aud in this respect increases the national wealth there is this to be observed in the first ' place it does not build up a home mar ket except for the manufacturer in the second place it does not increase the public vtealth in keeping our money at : home and forcing us to pay double prices ! for all wo need the census up to 1*70 : shows that the agricultural interests im ' mediately adjacent to the factories have 1 increased iu the same proportion with the j factories themselves so that no additional ! demand for the products of agriculture i from other sections of the country ha j been created by the growth of the other i interest no market was yet found for ! the teeming riches of oar soil south west ! northwest southwest at home if sold i at all they could not be purchased and consumed by the three or four million : of the protected class they had to reach out and find a market iu the hungry world particularly among the despised paupers ; < f europe it was many many years be fore transportation from the distant in i terior to the seaports was established on ! cheap aud easy terms and when their products did at last reach the coast they i r.'l uo american ships to take them i abroad as they did in the days of a reve nii tariff and foreign ships could not bring in anything to exchange for them by reason of protection the couse qucuce of this obstructed and unnatural state of trade was that the manufacturer i had indeed a home mai ket at his own price both to seli and buy in foreign products were absolutely shut off from competition with him and this in turn shut off foreign competition for our agri cultural products truly it is a lovely home market for the manufacturer sure enough it keeps our money at home that is to say iu the manufacturers pockets not in the pockets of the people or in the treas ury ot the people the senator from vermont who so lately entertained us with an elaborte and ingenious speech seems more in love with a home market than any one i have ever met the drift of his argument toward its conclusion was that we were raising entirely too much cotton too much wheat and corn and provisions generally the south ho gays should curtail its cotton crop and turn unfruitful capital aud labor into other and more profitable channels of industry the untrodden fields where capital'and labor wait to be organ ized for the development of southern manufactures and mining offer unrivaled temptations to leaders among men in search of legitimate wealth of the far mers of rhe west he says : every ship-load of wheat sent abroad tends to bring down foreign prices and such far oft markets should be sought only when the surplus at home is excessive or when foreign prices are extraordinari ly remunerative â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ certainly we need not be iu haste to slaughter and utterly exhaust the native fertility of our fields on the cheap terms now presented the meaning of all this plainly is for th farmers ot the south to raise no more cotton than will supply the home market that is the new englaud factories and foi the farmers of the west to grow no more provisions than wou'd feed the operatives iu those factories and let the great benefits of a foreign market export and import slip from our hands wh.it a delightful prospect for a protected man ufacturer the raw material and tlie 114k essaries of life at hi own price and his wares protected against the competition of all the world by atariffof over 0 iÂ»er cent ! mr president if the task were im posed on me of depicting a yankee bear en i should 6ay that this description ended my labors tho utter absurdity of such a policy viewed iu th light oi the true principles of political economy is only equaled by its shameless irish ness surely mr president i ceed not invoke the great names of that science oi sciences of adam smith john stuart mill kawcett wells and the long liÂ»t which embraces the brightest of mankind to prove that a nation cannot get rich by trading with itself â€” by a policy ef abso lute exclusion as well might we say the supply of water in a house could be increased by distribnting it around iu different vessels there is a legend 1 have heard which the rabbis inform me is not to be found in the talmud which say j that the three hebrew children shadracli meshack and abednego while in tlie i fiery furnace and excluded from the eom | petition of foreign paupers swapped jack | knives among themselves until each one j had made a dollar aud a half and g<Â»t the best knife 1 recommend this illustrious i instance of the benefits of a home market ! to the prayful consideration of the sena | tor from vermont laughter ! surely the senator from vermont can ; remember the time when there was what ' is called in the history of this country the japan expedition what was tlntl ja i nan was a nation of people out on the j extreme edge of asia i do not know j whether it would be east or west from u it is owing to which way you travel 1 ' suppose whether it would e east or west ! â€” iiut they were a people who had fore stalled llie policy ot the senator from vermont ami believed in a home market and believed in chopping off all competi tion with foreigners their ports were closed no trade and u intercourse was allowed with tbe world they were a world unto ilie.mslves,and they had a right to be it was none of our business if ihey : did not see proper to trade with us or with the rest of world they certainly had a right to sit down and enjoy the ! blessings of a home market but the i people of this conutry thought otherwise they fitted out the japan expedition aud ' sent ships of war and planted the stars and stripes in the face of these barbarians and they displayed from the port-holes of american ships those tremendous can â– on whose roar has been the fear as well \ m the admiration of mankind on all the ' seaa of the earth japan by force of da j ress opened her ports and reversed the ' policy of the senator from vermont and j censented to trade and let goods come in from foreign port i have some recollec tion of that and i commend it to the sen ] ator from vermont the ainericau iron and steel associ tiou in a recent address to tongress in speaking of the great benefits showered rnpon the country by the proteetire tariff states among other thiuÂ«i that it com pelled europe also to neml us within the past few months over w,000,0(k in gold and this thÂ«y nay pre^rvttd tbe biilanrn of trade in our fatwr u>d w;m a grÂ«at caue of our pnwpei ty ; and tki they mi was the fÂ«Â»ulk of um uiitl although th balance was utirÂ«ly due to unprotected agricultural products \* uheut desiring i to do injustice to geutk-men whom i do j not know i must say that whether thi assumption that our wealth was tuna in creased because jki.'i.ooo.lxk in gold had to bfi sent here to pay for agricultural products instead of sending goods to be exchanged therefor was made through ignoranee or with a deaigu to mislead long held me in doubt it seems to me i that a tyro must know that tbe articles represented by l>5,u(h),000 would consti tute more wealth than the money itself but for the operation of the tariff these gentlemen represent the iron interest which i protected by a tariff varying from &> to lf per cent railroad rails more than km per cent now suppose that sixty-five millions h:*d had beeu ex pended iu europe for steel rails it would have purchased nearly 2,000,000 tons which brought into this country would i have added that much to the public â– wealth hut coming ia as it did in gold â€¢ it would purchase but 1,000,000 tous horn t this american iron ami steel association so th country is poorer by at least 1,000 000 tons of steel mils but the gentlemen of this association are richer by 32,500 000 aud the treasury has received nol one cent and they call this national prosperity ! shades of political ecouomy where art thou ! iu the same liue is the reasoning f t!i senator from vermont in telling ue how protection has increased the national wealth he instances ste 1 he c - . no more of all sorts than il,83d tous was made in isgo but 1,397,015 touswi re made in 1830 the average pi ice of steel rails for that year and i presume steel bars and ingots were not less â€” were per ton its consumption therefore at wholesale rates cost the people 04,293,512 in england minus the urjff it could have been bought for about oue-nalf that sum say 47,000,000 or the same sum would have put twice as much steel here for the use oj the people and that ia setting rich ! does not the senator mistake things r hen he u*eb tho term national pros perity ? did he not mean to say the pros perity of the kessemer steel monopoly suppose congress had appropriated t lie money to buy that steel directly from thu treasury and given it to the people would that have increased tue public wealth ? can u nation just buy itself rich by taxatiou to make the purchases ? if so what in to hinder us from becoming the richest people in the world on the principle that the more w bny and tic ii gh r the price we pay the better ? and vvliat is the difference between t!ie dine and the indirect methods of btyring r!ii steel ho far an ir bears on i he question of tlie public wealth ! li tuis idea of excluding ajl foreign trade should prevail and t lt r s.<utli and west were to accept i!i policy of the senator and grow no bread u - outiun ex cept lor tlie lioui market it would l>e interesting to inquire wbat uld become t usi and if we went to manufacturing an we are advised w'uat would liecome ol new england i and after we hal sup plied thu home market whwra could we sell any thing else 1 how could we then pa lu^i wages and compete with pau per lain-r if n cannot du it now ? and it w sent out un ttgricultural produota iÂ»i mauufacturer would wunor bave to send abroad jjwbl fur all we yÂ»t f such adyice i coiiis is uut iu good faitb ; it is imlr a feeble effort t reconcile the pÂ«o|4e of a^i icultural regions to a protective t*r itt what would become ui our foreign trade if hul-ii an idea was tarries out aud wher'j would go tbat iwilauce of trad created lor u bj our a^ricuuur;il pro ducts ajuu 1 vet uii wliousalw u:v?tÂ»n ruin m nir*ly u4yim*il by t\ue 4i.^i of y*<*c4:tu>*i qua oratux in tluu t*ril cttnveutioa went so for m w eiwlaiiu : we do not want a market lm lirir j>ih4 r iu maucbeiuwr ; but w want ouv tuod to be vuusuiued br americans uudÂ»r our owu rlag wjiich sentiment was receited with great applause and laughter he certainly was in favor oi a liotoe market if he did not have common sense depicting the calamities that iw-fvll the commercial world iu itit.'j t!t senator from vermont wisely fail t tell iik liuw uca a thing liappÂ«iie<i under a protec tive tariff he only says dogmatically that it would have been macfa wtÂ»i il re had bÂ«en living under free trade ; and adds that ainericau workinginen found some shelter in tiietr home market 1 bey ai;aiii t contct a certain l(wÂ«iic of exi>ie.Â«>i'>ij peculiar to all higb laiiii men and into which the senator ha unadvisedly fallen of conrse he did not mean to leave the impreaaion -.\ : c ; bis woids coavey.rii.it all ainericau j workinguieu 1 found thai sheltei i storm bat only that small fraction oi j tiieui who work iu piol cted facl | t!:iÂ»e who are within the pule i 1 withont tli il pi i â€¢â– â€¢ ed i iicle i senator o,i ku ever but were strÂ»p;Â»Â«tl to the a 1 fui uish shslter foi â– ' tion ef the three tniloi s ol i style themselves the ameÂ»i i â€¢ iugineu admitting as in common honesty tliej are bfinnd to~do t tlie abstract iujnstici â– â€¢ taxing ttie many t->r tbe b â€¢;,( :.: i i few the protectionists coul - .^ â€¢ by saying tliat protection really in i classes by furuisliing a home all and enabling the n pay bigher prices to the agric tl i i now if the three million icople en i i in manufacturing con id cousnnie a surpliiti raised ou our bounteous s our magnificent climate by the otht i forty-seveu millions oi the american j people there would be some ens iu this proposition hut we know they cannot and the at tempt to snbordiafite tl e inten - Â«â– â€¢ :!. great mass of tho people to tbeconven ience and profit of a fraction bv slnmip therei off fromf the markets of tin woitd i simply an outrage it has ueither political ccenotny nor justice ner coo btitutionaljawte justify it that it helps a man to tax him for the pocket of another man is a new england proposition that need protection also badly take tor inatmiee the cotton-planter i:i tin south that industry i fear to call it an american industry"â€”furnish ed last rear 82j 1,535,905 toward t i gregate of oar foreign trade almost ten times tlie amount furnished by iron and steel h)d more than all the maaafactur d products cÂ»Â»biiÂ«d yÂ»t the irou and i twaiikjaÂ»4ur*)r get their raw mate rial mostly a*d tueir uuor all free and uÂ«h products are protected by a duty ranging froiu r to 181 per cent how is it wit the cotton-grower 1 in the first place he pays all the taxes state and national that all other citizens are re quired to pay when he starts ut in the spring to pitch bia crop on his plow lie pays o per cent r>d valorem : hi trace chaioa to pull the plow 2 cents per pound on bia wagon harrow and other irons ;><) per rent on his jack-knife 50 per ceut on the square by which ho measures his work u cents per pound and u per cent ad valorem : on his fifes aud rasps 10 cents per pouup and o per cent on his saw cents and ii per tout for bis ax 40 per cent for the iron hoops which iuelose his bale of cot tou when made u cents per pound ; for bis hammer i per pound ; bia wrought naiu ii ctuts pÂ»?i pound ; bia . ;: lj ccuth per pound ; hi horse - 5 cents per pound ; his tack , ; . from t ti 1 1 cenl - ;â€¢. : ; . irou hinges for his do . . cents pet pound on hi wife's bad-iron i i cents per pound e:i bis cross-cut aaw 10 cents per u>or all this averaging iie.uk inn per 'â– â– ut , lie nays to tbe l n.isylvania iron and -;->â– ! manufacturers not ;â€¢> tho goverusm nt ou tho bagjj â€¢ foi his cotton bates he pay 2 cents pur yard on his ,. ;;, : n shirt 3 cent per \ aid and l0 per cent on ins wife calico dress 5 ceuts per yard and 20 pe cent on hei â– ;' > â€¢! thread i ceyt each i :;" m r cent ou the common stone waro of iis cable 25 percent on his school boy's â– l cenl ; i i - glass ; i ii .â€¢!!â– ; -. '. â– i . ..* per c . â– blankets about 95 per â– â– â€¢ ut . â– wool hat and flannel shirt about <â€¢!! !â€¢!- wife's shawl 50 cents ;â– pound aad 35 ptr cent over 100 m i < i hif i:i in centm per pound : his :>."> per cent iiis witvs camphor ii cents per pound ; her gloveii ~><) xr cent hair pins 50 per cent on hid glue 20 per ceut his gnndstone i ceut per pound ; towder ( â€¢> cents per pound and â– â€ž'â€¢) per ceut suspenders 35 per cent iihlter boots for had weather mo percent his leather 25 per cent bis kerosiuo oil ut cents per gallon in sickuess his mor phia i taxed l per ounce : castor oil 1 per gallon and his upiiim ri per pduud even on his fruit tress and his garden and agricultural seeds he l taxed jti percent ad valorem nearly all of this goes into the pockets <>! the manu facturers who claim that the planter's prosperity i increased l this searcliing taxatiou ! nothing is free to him \ inij escapes t!n all pervading ).: otective tai ill â€” cei tain .;: y as the grave nusatisnable as t from the lime lie ec the light until that 1 i ii 1 1 1 is qaeuclie iu tho (â– ?â€¢â€¢. mil darkness that southern planter knows no uutaxed hear or unta . 11 is enveloped in taxation â– and saturated in it : and jet ii product aloue exceeds by far iu value the e-oiu bined products of all tiie prot i "â€¢ il manu factories of tlie united states it foreign exports which are the chief source of our national wealth and yet thin poor deluded man the cottou-plau tÂ«-1 is iutiuitely benefited 1 this enoi iiimitt taxation if lie only knew it ! in home mysterious way known only to the esoteric diÂ«ciple â€¢( protection the more money he pays to the manufacturer for tiie necessities uf his occupation the rich er he becomes what a blessed thing is protective taxation that thus and receives wealth ! the protected man un doubtedly yet rich a hi palaces and s'.iiumrr rÂ«eÂ»u testify the plauter tin dÂ«ubtÂ«<ily gets rich s;iy tiie senator hot withstanding his comfortless home and luwu ruu uureuudin^a tell a differeut fciu now if tka lÂ»iatk>h f the planter for the poÂ«kÂ«t of tbe manufacturer really helps tlmf planter why would it not help the manufacturer to be taxed for the planter's lnÂ«ueut suppose we sw ij in>i ti.iji a littln while juÂ«t to learn u<<\r it feels suppose we put ;; t:i hi 5 per hair uii every bale of cotton used bv an american factory for the > ncourageineut of cotton plautihgi it would certainly help the planter enable him ;<â€¢ pay high er wages t t;je americau labor winch works his tiÂ«lÂ«jt and thereby en i tie him to - o upete with the pauper laboi i asia atrica and jtii america â– â– â– i it â– enable the mauufacturer to Â« t higher piicws for all h lias to -â– ii i bat i the protective sauce for the gm ; why will it not serve for the g uot as boiut uiiglit Â« ipj â– â– -' the ;,; ice if cotton goods ; foi i licap fiii when placed m tin â€¢ i ired articles u i i pro â– . iou into a bless - l . enabled b â€¢ r'">l , l ovei l!i;t . 1 them to . ! which n ... â– â– â€¢ . -^'" . . .-> . . ~ fford m a ou â€¢,. cotton ci n â€¢ i 1375 tho . Â»- ot eleve . id ni least ] .... ivith tin â€¢ one ... ..(.,â€¢ > . . : i aud â– - . Â«,-. ' .: ik â– n dan teriug tiirongh the pro ] i dan ,,| 1 en i m th:s much vaunted home i id bail not â€¢ been able to rench <> tl to > l 70l xiii.--thirb series salisbuby n c biaech 2 1882 â–

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no 20 the carolina watchman established in the yk\i 1832 pril : . h.50 i v.\n e m^^m mmmmihb "~ trustee's sale of real estate by firtue of a mortgage or heed in trust executed by john c connor and s j connor to luke blackraer dated the 8th dar of april 1874 and registered in tlie office oi register of deeds of rowan coun tv in book no 48 page 170 c and upon which default has been made i will expose to ale at public auction at the courthouse dooi ' r slli on the 6th day oi ): 1882 at 11 i 'â– â– â– . ' ' tate to wit a 1 one-fifth ol of aleck mill r subject to the life esl also one-sixth p owned by jÂ«hn lli the lands'of peter vv hairston j im â€¢ 13 'â– rai inci i ' terms cash dati day of ft-bi iry i7:4t li b ' j-e fl 30 iebaker wagons r k crawford & c(x piember the dead ss mottttm great reduction in th of marble monuments and sravs-stc every description i cordially iuvite the public generally u an inspect ion of in : â– : i feel justified in asserting thai in tasi x|i.:i ience under first-chi ' en in all the newest and modern styles aii that the v orkmanship is < ;â– â€¢ oi thr besl in i lie couni ry i (!â€¢â– â– m that ni work is superior to all othi i ' nm reasonable will not exnggerale der to accomplish a sale ai endeavoris to please and gi each customi i the val ue of every dollar they leave with me prices 35 to 50 per cent cheaper than ever offered in this town before call at once or send for price list and de signs satisfaction guarant'd or no charge the erection of marble is the last work of respect which we pay to the memory of departed friends johns hutcbinsok salisbirt . \. c o i i i rlanvm ijlclullillul a.ttoi lors sa tasbu1 â– lai ay22 i 79â€”tt see mill 1 . want â– riplii "â€¢ ' - j â– â– : â– i ;â– : lv â– â– - . â– . a m i . : â– â– 1 he southern * fc !>-> ti i â– is ' as described by a northern visitorâ€”lead ers of society and the best people of the s the following is an extract from an article in tlie atlantic monthly written by an independent and thoughtful gen tleman whose letters to the new york tribune last year attracted so much at tention : as used in the north this word bour bon designates a class of white men composed chiefly of the leading citizens of the southern states tiic bourbons aie the principal business men lawyers teachers clergymen mer i farmers of i he south 1 hey are i veiywlu re the leaders of society in the best sense ol the word the sus tain tin churchi n ud give such efficiency to ; iiv uioi al activities and discipline of the local communities as the have thus i akeii broadly or general ly the i lass includes the best people of ith or most oi them they are . .-. bou 3 >' cai â– â– â€¢ in polil ice they are demo â– m opposition to the i q .â– .-.. â– â– !â– ' the re . inii uistered uitii â– â€¢ : â– â– â– .::â– . i he time . states â€¢ . i ; ' iguil - iy by â– ii â€¢ who is mvcii â– . : iii iprovi - i â€¢ â– . idi : ich society â– . - Â» â– iual'.y t\d : . ' :. ;â– ; 1 . ... ! i to iv â– . ; . â– .. ti â– â– . icy in people i>i ii tbe besl i eoplt .:. our not ; i commuuil ies i is w rong to : no faslehood si ice to the vir . good qnnl b are else !:\ goo ! men they are :. . i ruthful < ons ieatious :â€¢ ind ted and i eligions resembling â– \ ii e foremost men iu our .,! itable the ueces : ; id and resnll oi i ho peculiar coikditii is ci life and society iuth south the civil war li does not appear i to have been owing to sheer depravity on ; tin ir part nor tt any choice or agency of i tin irs thai there was for some years a disl orbed and unset led state of things in a states colli sious between reni classes followed unavoidably upon the elevation oi the emancipated slaves into political superiority over the uchised white citizens of tho coun try i here has ncyer been any such com pleteness of organization a nong the peo ple ol the south since the war as many persons believe tv have existed there that part of our country is distinguished by much greater feebleness of community and a less organic life than belongs to northern society and the bourbons are not really responsible for everything that has been done south of mason and dix on's line 1 shall have more to say here after of southern politics here 1 wish to i lace the bo-called bourbon type â€¢ ly as possil .â– h fore my readers thus dei ed are as ;â– . class social â– â€¢â€¢ spi able honest and en if we leir politics j ou oi iew they have iu large meas buili up aiul maintained such moral ial and religions organiza i ctivit . south now pos ' aud much of v hat is best and ng iu i '';â€¢â– â€¢â– â– â– -, n state of li the pi wthei i 1 mates is .â– i for jtacii cal reooiistructiou iu â€¢ v3e of extreme ulty ;;:..: i y v hen their re ; â– â– ;'â€¢:; â€¢â– â– â– wen mosl discouragingly slender - . â– . â– â– â– ecedeu to guide â– â– â– furnished by . i'i â€¢ . kind iu 1 be long â– * - i a nd barbar â– h ivc made w â– â– things e tl â– . â– .. . â– iu that we â– uyliod â– â€¢â– w â– â– . i â€¢ i tlou \Â» i-v â– â€¢'â– â– ' t s ficnth men ' i r . : â– l'li i ed an conviction that il nth i ro snf d i;o â– >â– ..-. cd v itjioul the eerioii r.jin h i iuter . lia south â– â– : eiuocrai should make the t ei t free to all who ti . â– â– legally eutitkd to its po - ion and i lieu en dure liatlvcj i : i mighi esnli they plied thai i tin banco violence and fraud were each year diminishing aud thai ucgro political supremacy would i be utterly ruinous foi the state and for !:. blow al the party in this 1 j state which will resull in i le for nation oi at i-d pai ty in the eveul is con g i mal ion i'iie n'ori u state is the oi .- â– â– the anti-moil c oper eombii ai i m w hich â€¢â– : ..; inning to run â– i s pai iy ui their own social iutcn â– â– '. and â€¢!Â»' va s and moans lltaf will noi bear the lights to be tui ne i on ii lias bee . a hotly waged cou-t t and v!;y the sweat of his brow a laborer have not these men who are excluded from the category of america given us all our wealth and all our pros perity felled ourforests aud buikled our railroads and dug our canals and made the land to blossom as the roue the senator from maine the other day astonished me not so much by what he said and what he saw but by what he did uot see and did not speak and he did not have the excuse for not seeing | the:ui if : â– . ' .:â€¢ i â– ; !'. nasi â€¢â– ho hoes i'ott'.i in . outli should i â– . :. . .... . . hoe-li . , : . on his j ick-knife and i frsi . . isjion hih flannel shirt an ! id m 1 ! .: nun - i i verythiug else i hat he ; uses in wdei m i i â– v ages of his !â€¢â– â– ew e â– â€¢.,'â– md should be such as s-hall enable him to do all this 11 taku ui : ; â€¢â€¢; ill ire fi o;u this .,,. â– . 1 â€¢ iiold i.i peace v : !'-:; k can - â– m tin lav or ( - ! ; i i t y j or j .â€¢:â– ! k'j for 111 ikiag on â– labi rer feed an j other and edu ate him and his children 1 then is th â– contvovei .-\ closed american labor ! certainly sir i am with you :'â€¢â€¢>! american labor let us pro tecl american labor and put the laborer ! as high in the scale of intelligence as pos sible but do no require the poor negro making cotton in the south at 8 10 a month to pay al 1 nsl one half of that ten to the now euglaud man thai he may have car pete n the door and a piano in the par lor that his children may go to school and all may learn i read and write that is not the kind of protection i want thai brings the whole subject to the oiiiliii i iudicated in my 0{>eniug re luai .-. flint is class legislation ; tliat is unjust legislation ; thai is unequal legis lation : thai if iinconstitutioual iegiala liou thai :- dishoue legislation and . here i of it i want all anier , . labor to have a fair and even chance i waul my own poor workingmen at home protectedÂ«iiot only against foreign pau pers but isu against brigandage al most ever item t>f foreign raw material 1 y our factoi ies is the product of foreign pan per hibor : and is admitted duty free j'.y the report of the chief of the bureau of statistics for the three months ending september 30 is30 there is sei ii a statement of the imports of iron ore which shows a total of 42 000 tons worth 1,102,000 brought from every quarter of the world all dug by pauper labor and much of it even by con vict labor as 1 am informed natably j !â€¢'{, 000 tons from the french possessions in africa this in preference to the ore dug by free american labor in alabama,ten nessee georgia north carolina and oth er states it comes in as ballast in for eign bottoms to the detriment of ameri can ship-owners in fact joe smith's book of mormon imports absolutely veri ty by the side of this cry of tho protected capitalists of the north for the protec tion of american agaiust pauper labor tho foreign pauper is iu fact the spe cial favorite of the manufacturers who discriminate in hin behalf whenever they can possibly make anything by it in the first place they invite him here and give him a homestead on ihe public do main if he will settle upon it while they denj this to eleven millions of their own countrymen who cauuot take die iron-clad oath citizi â– â– â– â€¢ of the states thro whose iu btrumeutality chiefly that domain was ac quired in the next j'hu we see by the reports of the consuls that there is a con siderable and constantly increasing trade i with nearly all |!| . > men at home ameri can labor is taxed that foreign paupers i â€¢ . nvt our goods cheap the m^i [ d mt and i he tii sl ~ â€¢ -" ... â– â€¢ â– â– â– ; '-''^ 1 ;â€¢. :. ,. -\ .-: us the eann bal : ...:.; : .. smith's missionary , .. cks him in the hea i nit a hatchet : .,â– - 1 icrli he paid aol hing i>iil ;'.< i ei â€¢ enl uiil s.il - him if he us .- th liii ' â€¢ salt foi â€¢ . â– . â€¢ . i!m 50 .!.Â«.:.. : i d sai â€¢ â€¢â€¢â– i ., .- ., 1 i . his medi h we 1 â€¢ â– â€¢â€¢'.â€¢ oi from : â– . ' ,, :> . ;â– .-; .â€¢d w;m a grÂ«at caue of our pnwpei ty ; and tki they mi was the fÂ«Â»ulk of um uiitl although th balance was utirÂ«ly due to unprotected agricultural products \* uheut desiring i to do injustice to geutk-men whom i do j not know i must say that whether thi assumption that our wealth was tuna in creased because jki.'i.ooo.lxk in gold had to bfi sent here to pay for agricultural products instead of sending goods to be exchanged therefor was made through ignoranee or with a deaigu to mislead long held me in doubt it seems to me i that a tyro must know that tbe articles represented by l>5,u(h),000 would consti tute more wealth than the money itself but for the operation of the tariff these gentlemen represent the iron interest which i protected by a tariff varying from &> to lf per cent railroad rails more than km per cent now suppose that sixty-five millions h:*d had beeu ex pended iu europe for steel rails it would have purchased nearly 2,000,000 tons which brought into this country would i have added that much to the public â– wealth hut coming ia as it did in gold â€¢ it would purchase but 1,000,000 tous horn t this american iron ami steel association so th country is poorer by at least 1,000 000 tons of steel mils but the gentlemen of this association are richer by 32,500 000 aud the treasury has received nol one cent and they call this national prosperity ! shades of political ecouomy where art thou ! iu the same liue is the reasoning f t!i senator from vermont in telling ue how protection has increased the national wealth he instances ste 1 he c - . no more of all sorts than il,83d tous was made in isgo but 1,397,015 touswi re made in 1830 the average pi ice of steel rails for that year and i presume steel bars and ingots were not less â€” were per ton its consumption therefore at wholesale rates cost the people 04,293,512 in england minus the urjff it could have been bought for about oue-nalf that sum say 47,000,000 or the same sum would have put twice as much steel here for the use oj the people and that ia setting rich ! does not the senator mistake things r hen he u*eb tho term national pros perity ? did he not mean to say the pros perity of the kessemer steel monopoly suppose congress had appropriated t lie money to buy that steel directly from thu treasury and given it to the people would that have increased tue public wealth ? can u nation just buy itself rich by taxatiou to make the purchases ? if so what in to hinder us from becoming the richest people in the world on the principle that the more w bny and tic ii gh r the price we pay the better ? and vvliat is the difference between t!ie dine and the indirect methods of btyring r!ii steel ho far an ir bears on i he question of tlie public wealth ! li tuis idea of excluding ajl foreign trade should prevail and t lt r s.e interesting to inquire wbat uld become t usi and if we went to manufacturing an we are advised w'uat would liecome ol new england i and after we hal sup plied thu home market whwra could we sell any thing else 1 how could we then pa lu^i wages and compete with pau per lain-r if n cannot du it now ? and it w sent out un ttgricultural produota iÂ»i mauufacturer would wunor bave to send abroad jjwbl fur all we yÂ»t f such adyice i coiiis is uut iu good faitb ; it is imlr a feeble effort t reconcile the pÂ«o|4e of a^i icultural regions to a protective t*r itt what would become ui our foreign trade if hul-ii an idea was tarries out aud wher'j would go tbat iwilauce of trad created lor u bj our a^ricuuur;il pro ducts ajuu 1 vet uii wliousalw u:v?tÂ»n ruin m nir*ly u4yim*il by t\ue 4i.^i of y**i qua oratux in tluu t*ril cttnveutioa went so for m w eiwlaiiu : we do not want a market lm lirir j>ih4 r iu maucbeiuwr ; but w want ouv tuod to be vuusuiued br americans uudÂ»r our owu rlag wjiich sentiment was receited with great applause and laughter he certainly was in favor oi a liotoe market if he did not have common sense depicting the calamities that iw-fvll the commercial world iu itit.'j t!t senator from vermont wisely fail t tell iik liuw uca a thing liappÂ«iieie.Â«>i'>ij peculiar to all higb laiiii men and into which the senator ha unadvisedly fallen of conrse he did not mean to leave the impreaaion -.\ : c ; bis woids coavey.rii.it all ainericau j workinguieu 1 found thai sheltei i storm bat only that small fraction oi j tiieui who work iu piol cted facl | t!:iÂ»e who are within the pule i 1 withont tli il pi i â€¢â– â€¢ ed i iicle i senator o,i ku ever but were strÂ»p;Â»Â«tl to the a 1 fui uish shslter foi â– ' tion ef the three tniloi s ol i style themselves the ameÂ»i i â€¢ iugineu admitting as in common honesty tliej are bfinnd to~do t tlie abstract iujnstici â– â€¢ taxing ttie many t->r tbe b â€¢;,( :.: i i few the protectionists coul - .^ â€¢ by saying tliat protection really in i classes by furuisliing a home all and enabling the n pay bigher prices to the agric tl i i now if the three million icople en i i in manufacturing con id cousnnie a surpliiti raised ou our bounteous s our magnificent climate by the otht i forty-seveu millions oi the american j people there would be some ens iu this proposition hut we know they cannot and the at tempt to snbordiafite tl e inten - Â«â– â€¢ :!. great mass of tho people to tbeconven ience and profit of a fraction bv slnmip therei off fromf the markets of tin woitd i simply an outrage it has ueither political ccenotny nor justice ner coo btitutionaljawte justify it that it helps a man to tax him for the pocket of another man is a new england proposition that need protection also badly take tor inatmiee the cotton-planter i:i tin south that industry i fear to call it an american industry"â€”furnish ed last rear 82j 1,535,905 toward t i gregate of oar foreign trade almost ten times tlie amount furnished by iron and steel h)d more than all the maaafactur d products cÂ»Â»biiÂ«d yÂ»t the irou and i twaiikjaÂ»4ur*)r get their raw mate rial mostly a*d tueir uuor all free and uÂ«h products are protected by a duty ranging froiu r to 181 per cent how is it wit the cotton-grower 1 in the first place he pays all the taxes state and national that all other citizens are re quired to pay when he starts ut in the spring to pitch bia crop on his plow lie pays o per cent r>d valorem : hi trace chaioa to pull the plow 2 cents per pound on bia wagon harrow and other irons ;>or all this averaging iie.uk inn per 'â– â– ut , lie nays to tbe l n.isylvania iron and -;->â– ! manufacturers not ;â€¢> tho goverusm nt ou tho bagjj â€¢ foi his cotton bates he pay 2 cents pur yard on his ,. ;;, : n shirt 3 cent per \ aid and l0 per cent on ins wife calico dress 5 ceuts per yard and 20 pe cent on hei â– ;' > â€¢! thread i ceyt each i :;" m r cent ou the common stone waro of iis cable 25 percent on his school boy's â– l cenl ; i i - glass ; i ii .â€¢!!â– ; -. '. â– i . ..* per c . â– blankets about 95 per â– â– â€¢ ut . â– wool hat and flannel shirt about ."> per cent iiis witvs camphor ii cents per pound ; her gloveii ~> cents per pound and â– â€ž'â€¢) per ceut suspenders 35 per cent iihlter boots for had weather mo percent his leather 25 per cent bis kerosiuo oil ut cents per gallon in sickuess his mor phia i taxed l per ounce : castor oil 1 per gallon and his upiiim ri per pduud even on his fruit tress and his garden and agricultural seeds he l taxed jti percent ad valorem nearly all of this goes into the pockets <>! the manu facturers who claim that the planter's prosperity i increased l this searcliing taxatiou ! nothing is free to him \ inij escapes t!n all pervading ).: otective tai ill â€” cei tain .;: y as the grave nusatisnable as t from the lime lie ec the light until that 1 i ii 1 1 1 is qaeuclie iu tho (â– ?â€¢â€¢. mil darkness that southern planter knows no uutaxed hear or unta . 11 is enveloped in taxation â– and saturated in it : and jet ii product aloue exceeds by far iu value the e-oiu bined products of all tiie prot i "â€¢ il manu factories of tlie united states it foreign exports which are the chief source of our national wealth and yet thin poor deluded man the cottou-plau tÂ«-1 is iutiuitely benefited 1 this enoi iiimitt taxation if lie only knew it ! in home mysterious way known only to the esoteric diÂ«ciple â€¢( protection the more money he pays to the manufacturer for tiie necessities uf his occupation the rich er he becomes what a blessed thing is protective taxation that thus and receives wealth ! the protected man un doubtedly yet rich a hi palaces and s'.iiumrr rÂ«eÂ»u testify the plauter tin dÂ«ubtÂ«h f the planter for the poÂ«kÂ«t of tbe manufacturer really helps tlmf planter why would it not help the manufacturer to be taxed for the planter's lnÂ«ueut suppose we sw ij in>i ti.iji a littln while juÂ«t to learn u< ncourageineut of cotton plautihgi it would certainly help the planter enable him ;l , l ovei l!i;t . 1 them to . ! which n ... â– â– â€¢ . -^'" . . .-> . . ~ fford m a ou â€¢,. cotton ci n â€¢ i 1375 tho . Â»- ot eleve . id ni least ] .... ivith tin â€¢ one ... ..(.,â€¢ > . . : i aud â– - . Â«,-. ' .: ik â– n dan teriug tiirongh the pro ] i dan ,,| 1 en i m th:s much vaunted home i id bail not â€¢ been able to rench <> tl to > l 70l xiii.--thirb series salisbuby n c biaech 2 1882 â–